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Technologies 'to aid the poor'
The best way to help developing nations is to recognise that development is "of the people, by the people and for the people", says a Bangladeshi entrepreneur.
Iqbal Quadir, Grameen Phone founder in Bangladesh, told experts gathered for TED Global in Oxford that aid strategies for the last 60 years had failed.
Technologies such as mobiles empowered people because they connected them.
This, he said, fuelled productivity much more than the top-down aid approach.
Mr Quadir had the idea for Grameen Phone, a way to get mobile telephony into Bangladeshi villages and rural areas, 12 years ago.
Since then, the company has grown to more than 3.5 million subscribers, with more than 115,000 phones in villages across the country.
Voices heard
Talking at the TED (Technology, Entertainment and Design) Global conference, a top US event being held in Europe for the first time, he criticised aid for developing countries that benefited authorities over the people themselves.
"The only way we can depend on each other is if we connect with each other. Connectivity leads to dependability which leads to specialisation and then productivity," he said.
What was key about a technology as simple as the mobile in a rural village was that people's voices, not just those in authority, were heard.
The next step, he hoped, would be to get wireless internet via mobile devices into villages. But he warned of jumping on the technology bandwagon.
Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/technology/4679015.stm
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